Silliest Thing A DCP Ever Complained About
Just thought it would be interesting to hear what the silliest thing a parent ever complained to you about
This morning I had a complaint that rates right up there with some of my silliest...Yesterday I was wrapping a few gifts. I explained to the kiddos who these gifts were for. Little Johnny's (age 6) mom came in today complaining that I broke his heart because I was wrapping gifts and I told him that they weren't for him. Little Johnny never bothered telling his mommy that these presents were for The kids at Charis House-a women's shelter locally. Sad part is-mom still seemed more concerned that her precious son was sad...the children who all helped with the wrapping were school age-well old enough to learn about doing for others. I could have easily done this alone in the evening, but I purposely had the SA kids help to be included in the spirit of giving. |
Originally Posted by Poptarts22: |
That is ridiculous.
The only one that comes to mind is fairly recent. That I was changing the child TOO much. (They thought leaving the child in poop for extended periods of time would help potty train him.) They also wanted me to give him options on everything- even what/when/where to eat, sleep, drink, potty, etc. NO. NO. NO. |
when my "free spirit" family questioned why I made them hold their child's hand upon arrival/departure....we have a 6 acre plot of land and the mom would let the child run all over it in the morning and evening. The mom said "oh, xxxx, Ms. xxxx says you can't play in the yard"....we live near the 4-lane highway:eek: I should not have had to tell her that but some parents need parented.:ouch:
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They never made it past the tour, but i had a prospective parent ask where the swing was for their infant. Complete shock when i said i don't put babies in containers.
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Giving a birthday celebration
Once a month we celebrate the monthly birthdays.
Had a family years ago that got so mad at me because our birthday celebration day fell before her child's family party. the kid was turning 3. according to the mother, I ruined his family party because the child said I don't want another party, I already had one at school.... so they asked me to stop doing birthday celebrations. OMG. all we do is eat cupcake and sing happy birthday to the child with candles and all of the dcks make a card for the birthday kids. |
So, one of you is going to collect all of these and turn it into a summer comedy script, right?
"This summer, enroll in the funniest family day care." *baby farting sound* "Selena Gomez is Auntie Dumpling." *slide whistle sound as Selena Gomez slips in mushed peas and falls flat on her back* Parent: "Could you please stop celebrating birthdays? Melinda feels threatened when other children receive attention." *slide whistle sound as Melinda dumps cake on Selena Gomez's head* "So sign in to Auntie Dumpling's Day Care, coming soon to a theater near you!" *slide whistle sound as Melinda's mom puts the car into drive instead of reverse and takes out a porch column* |
Originally Posted by Annalee: 2 years later that dcb is out of control :rolleyes: Parents refuse to discipline. Want to know if dcb can come back :lol: |
I had a parent with a child who has asthma/allergies - asked if we could cancel outdoor time so her child wouldn't be exposed to allergens. I told her no.
They lasted a week. |
Originally Posted by NillaWafers: |
That reminds me of a dcb that I have that gets really bad mosquito bites. I live in the woods :ouch:
I spray for him (nothing harmful), but he still gets a few bad bites a week during the bad parts of the year. Dcm wanted me to keep him inside. Nope...... |
One spring, I had the kids do a craft that included coloring a bird. One of my dc moms complained that the birds were colored brown instead of grayish brown.:rolleyes: She apologized the next day.
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Originally Posted by e.j.: |
Originally Posted by Poptarts22: |
Had to ask one family to leave because their child was so violent. He was just about 3 (just turned if I remember) and would kick and hit all day. Started out at 2 days per week, then went full time. His first fill time week he kept picking on the kids, then at nap tried to suffocate one with a blanket. Moments latter tried to pour baby powered on him while straddling the poor boy!
We moved him out of the nap room, and let mom know that day that he would need to leave. Her request? "well do I get my money back for the week?" :rolleyes: She then proceeded to report us for child abuse, because that's the ONLY reason her precious baby would do those things... Another parent came to me one morning irate and yelled at me that it was MY fault she HAD to buy her spoiled 4yr old a cake last night. :confused: I asked why and she said because when he was in time out (near our kitchen at the time) he saw my birthday cake that I was SO mean in not offering to him ... in time out... that she was FORCED to buy one on the way home... |
Originally Posted by Pandaluver21: I feel like we could write a very entertaining "how not to raise your child" book from the collection of stories on here. |
Yeh, that cake story really ummm takes the cake. Bad provider forcing momma to buy her ds a cake. :rolleyes: I worry about the future of some of these kids.
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These are great! I had a dcp that wanted me to basically document her child's full day. She wanted to know what and how much of each item 3 yo dcb ate and what he said and did. She even came one day to watch him while he was here and questioned him on everything. Once I saw her for the helicopter parent she is and she saw that I was not going to document every part of her child's day we parted ways. :ouch:
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I have had parents complain about "screen time" because my TV was in the same area as the daycare. I NEVER put the TV on during daycare, we don't even have cable. My own kids are allowed to watch TV in the morning while I get ready for work and while I am cooking dinner and on weekends. I explained this multiple times but the parents were constantly mentioning/complaining about TV and its negative side affects on kids, and their concern about dck being exposed to the TV while at my house. I finally moved the TV upstairs completely away from any daycare areas just to shut them up.
Fast forward a year and a half, and their little one has started talking. All she talks about is Peppa Pig, Paw Patrol, Curious George, ect. So I guess TV really isn't all that bad :rolleyes: |
I don't know how many of you use handwriting without tears… But one mom complained that Matt Man does not have a neck. She told her child to make sure to put a neck on Mat Man every time.
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Originally Posted by happymom: Originally Posted by MissAnn: |
I let the kids explore with peanut butter. I told all parents before hand. Mom said I was wasting food and that I could be giving it to the homeless. I asked her why didn't she go and feed the homeless herself then and she said she does. On Thanksgiving. That's it. Just 1 time a year. This is the family I termed a while back. Dcb had a blast with the peanut butter.
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Originally Posted by spedmommy4: One day at pick up the same little boy came over and held my hand "aww cute" right? ... No, he actually grabbed my hand to wipe boogers up my arm... :mad: Mom laughed and I left the room (leaving them with our other provider) I ended up texting the mom later apologizing for leaving without saying anything. She wrote back and said "Yeah really, boogers are part of the job. He just did it to you because I do it to him..":eek: |
I consider myself truly blessed to have normal sane parents. All your stories are head-shaking hilariously sad(for the kids and what they're learning from adults) 'are you kidding me?' stories. It's like what the heck are they thinking???
I have only 1 little snippet that I remember from probably 25 years ago. Dcb was 3-4 and always bugged my own ds. Dcd told my son he could hit him if he wanted to. I said no, he cant. But my story pales in comparison. |
Originally Posted by lovemydaycare0912: |
Originally Posted by Mad_Pistachio: |
Originally Posted by Pestle: we have a FreeCycle group in town, they collect food for Thanksgiving/Christmas that the group leader distributes herself. good, they feed people. but then Spring comes, with all the lack of vitamins, and Summer, with heat and all... and everyone forgets about those people they fed so well over the holidays. as if they only need to eat for about a month a year. I'm not going to brag that I volunteer at a soup kitchen: I don't. but it is in the Summer I remember all the canned stuff I've been squirreling away and take it to the food bank. no, no canned potatoes :) it is a drop in a bucket, I fully realize it. but, hey, "do what you can and let it be." |
Probably the parent who kept telling me I needed 5 sets of everything so that every child could play with any toy at any time. Every time I tried to explain the importance of learning sharing/ taking turns/ cooperative play is turned into some variation of "but then DCK won't always get what he wants". :rolleyes:
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Originally Posted by DaveA: |
The craziest thing that anyone ever asked of me was when a DCM asked me to not only NOT tell her son NO but she wanted me to also prohibit everyone from saying NO. And I'm not just talking about her not wanting us to tell him NO but she didn't want the use of the word NO at all, ever. So even if he asked me a question that required a NO as an answer ("Can penguins fly?") she didn't want me using the word, didn't want the daycare kids using the word, didn't want my own kids or husband using the word, didn't want me to allow THE OTHER PARENTS FROM USING THE WORD NO!
I told her NO :lol: |
Originally Posted by Mad_Pistachio: |
Originally Posted by MarinaVanessa: |
Originally Posted by lovemydaycare0912: |
Unrealistic Requests
Originally Posted by NillaWafers: |
Originally Posted by Sumshine: To this day I get such silly requests that I put it on my website that I will not cater to each families personal needs because I am a business owner not a personal nanny... this includes NOT serving all the kids vegan meals, teaching bible stories or co sleeping lol |
wow some of these are so shocking. I wonder what parents think when their child goes on to formal schooling...
I recall having a parent that was so angry at me during an interview. they wanted g-ma to be able to come and stay with the child all day. I had to laugh I couldn't resist saying, then what do you need me for..... the odd thing was that they did not get it at all when I told them I couldn't allow for it. I wonder what people are thinking sometimes. |
Originally Posted by daycare: |
Originally Posted by Annalee: |
Originally Posted by LysesKids: |
Originally Posted by Baby Beluga: |
I had a mom who wanted her 12 month old to just fall asleep on the floor wherever she got tired. That's how they did it at home. Baby would just crawl around until she was exhausted and crash out on the floor. When she woke up, she would get back up and crawl away. It took a few weeks of training, but she did end up being a great napper, in a pack n play.
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Originally Posted by happymom: |
Originally Posted by Rockgirl: |
Originally Posted by daycarediva: |
Originally Posted by Pestle: |
I had one complain that the reason he missed out on his daughter's holiday party at her preschool was because I had closed the day before for a snow day:confused:
Of course all the other times he had taken days off (still sending in her in) had *nothing* to do with his lack of PTO :rolleyes: (And he never attended any preschool function or participated in anything extra they did, but he wanted to guilt me into believing it was some how my fault. ) His new DC is open until 5:30 and even though he's home by 4:30, she's at DC until close. Don't miss him at all. |
Originally Posted by Baby Beluga: |
Originally Posted by Rockgirl: |
Originally Posted by Josiegirl: they must be related. another globe, another calendar... |
Originally Posted by daycarediva: |
Originally Posted by Baby Beluga: |
When I first started teaching, I had a dcm complain that she didn't like me cheerfully telling her that her dcg "had a good day." She explained that dcg horribly misbehaved at home, so she didn't like hearing that she behaved for us at school. Then, she told my teaching partner that I had just given her a "blank stare" when she told me this.
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I work at a Center and we had parents who were up in arms because their kids weren't allowed to bring in their tablets to use "if they got bored". The children were 1 1/2 and almost 3. :eek:
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